Senior Member

Possibly. First thing to do would be to open a command shell terminal, go to the folder you installed into, and try launching AXEpad from there. -

Code:

./LinAXEpad

That's dot-slash-LinAXEpad - case is significant.

That may show errors which any desktop is silently discarding - which they unfortunately have a tendency to do.

I know AXEpad has worked under Mint but I cannot off-hand say which version that was. The most likely issue these days is that AXEpad is a 32-bit program and distros tend to be 64-bit and don't include 32-bit libraries by default these days.

Member

Try opening the directory where you put LinAXEpad then right-click on an empty space in the directory window. In the pop-up menu, select "Open in a terminal" (or whatever it is in english) and then type ./LinAXEpad in the terminal.

You should get some more usefull error messages, or if you're very lucky and the 32-bit libraries you need are already installed, the LinAXEpad window!

This used to do the trick to get the 32-bit libraries, but that was a while ago: